There is a great utility out there called logparser which you could use to dumop the information from any log then upload it using simple ftp or other command line utility. I'm sure you could write up a batch script very easily and schedule that as a task to run automatically.

I'm not aware of any way to dump the event continuously with this tool but if you were dumping to a windows system you would be able to use the Windows Event Collector Service to consolidate logs from multiple servers.
You may be better off with a log consolidation/SIEM tool. SolarWinds has a free log consolidating utility for windows.

It is still possible to script it with logparser and just use a filter to output any events that occured within the last 5 minutes or any interval you are willing to use as a delay.

This course is designed to familiarize and instruct students in the content that is covered by Microsoft Exam 70-533, Implementing Microsoft Azure Solutions. It focuses on all the November 2016 objective domain topics.

I am not sure. I was just thinking about the linux server connecting to the MS SQL db and extract the required logs (all/filtered list: pull events based on a timeframe and then sort by computer name as the first column)

Linux logs are files that are appended with new records. So no way to mess up time ordering.
Both syslog-ng and rsyslog allow extracting (like awk) computer name, then create subdirectory based on that.
(See their documentation, I find syslog-ng easier, but you may land in other side)

Syslog-ng can parse log lines using regular expression matching.
I was suggesting installing syslog-ng or rsyslog on windows and forward logs with TCP and spooling on client side - completely reliable.
You will need to parse them ith syslog-ng afterwards (At least sending IP is not source host, so you need to extract that field.

Sure it can read SQL responses or log files on the disk, but that is slow and unreliable input. With syslog agent on windows you will get 100% of logs copied over.

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